Alison Rowat

Senior politics and features writer

I joined The Herald in 1998. Currently the paper's film writer and columnist, I was previously a leader writer, foreign editor and sub-editor.

I joined The Herald in 1998. Currently the paper's film writer and columnist, I was previously a leader writer, foreign editor and sub-editor.

Latest articles from Alison Rowat

TV PREVIEW The Piano is back and there's a visit to Scotland on the cards

The Piano (Channel 4, Sunday, 9pm) is back, promising new station venues, fresh amateur hopefuls ready to make a public piano sing, and the same judges and presenter in Lang Lang, Mika and Claudia Winkleman. One of the ratings smashes of last year, bringing in some three million viewers, The Piano was a word-of-mouth hit for Channel 4. Series one was followed by a Christmas special and the commissioning of two more runs.

Alison Rowat: Whatever Yousaf wished for, it cannot have been this

As Humza Yousaf walked towards that increasingly famous Bute House podium he looked the picture of confidence.The task before him involved a certain degree of unpleasantness but there was no need to be brutal. The partnership with the Scottish Greens had outlived its usefulness, that is all. How long, one wonders, before the same is being said of him?

Alison Rowat: Should Scots be more Welsh about Holyrood?

A lot of people in Wales hated the 20mph policy. Half a million of them to be precise, all of whom signed a petition to say so. And what did the Welsh government do? A lovely big U-turn, that is what. Councils were told they could go back to 30mph where it was deemed necessary and safe.

Alison Rowat: As strategists go, Humza is less Succession than Sesame Street

Across television and radio, politics show presenters competed to see who could best convey the mood of the past seven days. Kuenssberg said it had not been “the prettiest week” while The Sunday Show’s Martin Geissler described “another bruising week” for the Scottish Government and the Scottish Greens in particular.

TV PREVIEW Can't get a ticket to see David Tennant on stage? Here's the next best thing

Good Starring David Tennant (BBC4, Sunday, 10pm) brings a filmed performance of CP Taylor’s modern classic to the small screen. This is the National Theatre production that marked Tennant’s triumphant return to the West End post-pandemic. Directed by Dominic Cooke, the filmed version had a run in cinemas last April but now it comes to terrestrial TV and is yours to watch free (save for the licence fee).

Alison Rowat; Now BBC and presenter drawn into Labour 'two homes' row

Asked on BBC1's Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg how Labour was handling the accusations against Angela Rayner, the writer and Labour supporter John O’Farrell said it was a “ridiculous non-story” and “a bit of gossip” that Kuenssberg, and the BBC in general, should not feel obliged to keep reporting. “It’s not a story just because the Mail says it is a story,” he said.